The Woman by the Lake (Misted Pines #3) Read Online Kristen Ashley

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Misted Pines Series by Kristen Ashley
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Total pages in book: 137
Estimated words: 135696 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 678(@200wpm)___ 543(@250wpm)___ 452(@300wpm)
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“Well, silver lining for you both, it’s clear your swimmers are powerful if one go gets a woman pregnant.”

“Her campaign with Storm was more persistent. Not sure which time it happened, but he told me he was with her three times. And yeah, the first night, his wallet had gone missing. And yeah, it did this at The Hole. The other two, she had the chance to see to things herself.”

“So it’s just your swimmers that are super powerful.”

He shot me another smile and squeezed my behind besides.

Totally riding this out.

“Have you heard from her?” I asked.

“No,” he answered.

“Good,” I muttered. Then I shared something with him that had also occurred to me in all my driving. “So, I had occasion to casually chat with Brenda about the Whitaker family situation, and she shared with me that Roosevelt had an assistant. And she still lives in town.”

“Honey,” he said in a tone I wasn’t sure about.

“What?”

He hooked an arm around my waist, shifted us down the counter, then I tensed as he reached out and touched my digital photo screen.

He scrolled forward until he hit the photo of me and Trevor on a cliff in Cornwall, a pirate’s cove and the stormy sea behind us, wind ruffling our hair, smiles on our faces.

“Now,” he said quietly, “we can scheme a way to go interrogate Roosevelt’s assistant without letting her know we’re interrogating her, when neither of us know the woman, or you can tell me about your husband.”

“Riggs,” I whispered.

“You’re not ready, okay. Your call. But you bury shit, it always finds a way to bite you in the ass.”

“He died a long time ago.”

“So I’m starting with the history stuff so we can lead into the more recent shit.”

Fun times ahead, I saw.

Ugh.

“He had cancer when we met,” I blurted.

He blinked rapidly several times before he asked, “I’m sorry?”

“He had cancer when we met,” I repeated. “But he didn’t tell me. He’d tried some holistic stuff, which didn’t work. And when he started Western medicine, he hid it from me.”

“Jesus,” he bit out.

“He genuinely believed he could beat it when he asked me to marry him. The doctors weren’t so sure, but they were trying to be optimistic. He was young. Healthy. If there was a candidate who could, he could. But it spread, fast and aggressively, and eventually he couldn’t hide it anymore.”

“He should have told you,” he gritted.

“I know,” I replied running my hands up and down his arms because he was visibly angry. “And I get your reaction. I had that too. In waves, when I found out he was sick, when he admitted to me how long he’d been sick. I even felt that after he was gone. But for the life of me, I can’t fault a twenty-eight-year-old man for being determined to live his life, and survive, and maybe going into denial about the possibility, that turned into a probability, that ended in a definite that he wasn’t going to.”

He seemed to be looking at me, though he really wasn’t, when he asked, “Did you love him?”

I knew my smile was sad. “Yes. I loved him a whole lot.”

“And you wanted kids.”

“We both did.”

“So he took that from you. The you wanting kids part.”

“No, my sperm donor father did.”

“Honey—”

I lifted my hands to his neck and held tight. “Riggs, I loved Trevor, and I lost him. It was not all good times, but we knew those times would be short, so we packed a lot into them. I’m glad I met him. I’m glad I married him. I’m blessed to have the time I had with him. I love that I got to be the woman who he loved who would be by his side through all of that. He had great parents, and we’re still in touch, but I’m the promise of the life he should have had, so we’re no longer close. But I also got them through him. And maybe I wallowed in all of that after he was gone. I don’t think anyone would blame me. He might not have played it all perfectly, but what he did was understandable. He’s not baggage, even though I will admit, I carried him like that for a long time. Now I see he’s a part of my life, memories of loving someone and being loved by someone, and a lot of laughter. That’s what I carry with me from Trevor now, and it isn’t heavy.”

“All right,” he muttered.

“Okay,” I whispered.

He touched his mouth to mine.

When he moved away, I got up on my toes and touched mine to his.

“Now, can we talk about Roosevelt’s assistant?” I requested.

He burst out laughing, gave me a squeeze, then said, “No. I’m gonna fix your door. And if I have time, install a couple of cameras. You’re gonna get me some water then make me some lunch. I haven’t had any yet, and I’m fucking starving.”


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